Saturday, 22 October 2016

In this article we write a complete list of 2016top upcoming hollywood movies news. In this article we write a list of horer movies missons movies civil war movies based on jungle movies batman movies superman movies Warcraft movies based on animal movies based on biography drama comedy adventure based on full action movie based on full romance movies based on adventure action and other type of movies details are provide in this article. A good collection of all fantastic movies 2016 are here

Hollywood Upcoming Movies News:
Tyler Perry brings back his trademark drag character for this latest outing, set on the titular holiday.
Thanks, Chris Rock. Thanks a lot.

The idea for Tyler Perry's latest outing as his drag character Madea was inspired by a fake reference in Rock's movie Top Five. Supposedly, the title so tickled the folks at Lionsgate that they asked Perry to base a film on it. So now we have Boo! A Madea Halloween, which should scare up decent box-office returns through the titular holiday and, considering its obviously low budget, make a tidy profit in the process.

At this point, reviewing a Madea film is like a food critic reviewing the fare at McDonald's. By any objective standard, it's subpar, made of cheap ingredients and panders to the undiscriminating. But millions of people seem to love it, and happily come back for more.

READ MORE
Bella Thorne Joins Tyler Perry's 'Boo! A Madea Halloween'
The latest adventure involving the sassy, tough-talking matriarch involves 17-year-old Tiffany (Diamond White), daughter of Madea's mild-mannered nephew Brian (Perry, again). Brian forbids Tiffany from attending a frat party with her friend Aday (Liza Koshy), and enlists his extended family of Madea, Aunt Bam (Cassi Davis), Hattie (Patrice Lovely) and Joe (Perry, yet again) to babysit. But the resourceful teen sneaks out of the house, forcing Madea and her female cronies to head to the frat house where, suffice it to say, hilarity does not ensue. Unless, that is, you think Madea exposing her breasts to the horrified young men is too funny for words.

Dutifully living up to its title, the film introduces mild horror elements, with Madea and her cohorts coming into contact with supernatural phenomena, an evil clown and zombies who chase them through the woods. Although there's a long cinematic tradition of mixing comedy with scares to excellent effect — Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein being a prime example — this lackluster effort manages to be neither funny nor scary.

Not that it will matter to the franchise's fans, who will no doubt roar at Aunt Bam stealing candy from a young trick-or-treater and gleefully showing off her medical marijuana card; the elderly Joe smoking a joint and referring to playing with himself; jokes about prostate exams; and the oldsters merrily cackling about the benefits of physically abusing children.

When Brian complains to his uncle Joe about being thrown off the roof when he was four years old, Joe accusingly asks him, "Did you die?"

'Too Close to Home'
READ MORE
Tyler Perry's 'Too Close to Home' Renewed for Season 2 at TLC
Attempting to reach younger audiences, Perry has cast several social media stars as the fraternity brothers, and a young female twerker who's had millions of views on YouTube. While they all look like they're having a fun time, whatever talents they may possess don't translate to the big screen.

Shot sitcom-style with multiple cameras and minimal takes, the film looks atrocious. It's disheartening that Perry, for all his obvious smarts and savvy, is unwilling to up his cinematic game. There's no arguing with the massive success he's had in film, television and theater, and he's clearly giving the people what they want. But the puerile humor that he continues to peddle makes awfully depressing viewing for those who don't find the concept of a large, middle-aged man in drag inherently funny.

Casting: Kim Taylor-ColemanTyler Perry brings back his trademark drag character for this latest outing, set on the titular holiday.
Thanks, Chris Rock. Thanks a lot.

The idea for Tyler Perry's latest outing as his drag character Madea was inspired by a fake reference in Rock's movie Top Five. Supposedly, the title so tickled the folks at Lionsgate that they asked Perry to base a film on it. So now we have Boo! A Madea Halloween, which should scare up decent box-office returns through the titular holiday and, considering its obviously low budget, make a tidy profit in the process.

At this point, reviewing a Madea film is like a food critic reviewing the fare at McDonald's. By any objective standard, it's subpar, made of cheap ingredients and panders to the undiscriminating. But millions of people seem to love it, and happily come back for more.

READ MORE
Bella Thorne Joins Tyler Perry's 'Boo! A Madea Halloween'
The latest adventure involving the sassy, tough-talking matriarch involves 17-year-old Tiffany (Diamond White), daughter of Madea's mild-mannered nephew Brian (Perry, again). Brian forbids Tiffany from attending a frat party with her friend Aday (Liza Koshy), and enlists his extended family of Madea, Aunt Bam (Cassi Davis), Hattie (Patrice Lovely) and Joe (Perry, yet again) to babysit. But the resourceful teen sneaks out of the house, forcing Madea and her female cronies to head to the frat house where, suffice it to say, hilarity does not ensue. Unless, that is, you think Madea exposing her breasts to the horrified young men is too funny for words.

Dutifully living up to its title, the film introduces mild horror elements, with Madea and her cohorts coming into contact with supernatural phenomena, an evil clown and zombies who chase them through the woods. Although there's a long cinematic tradition of mixing comedy with scares to excellent effect — Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein being a prime example — this lackluster effort manages to be neither funny nor scary.

Not that it will matter to the franchise's fans, who will no doubt roar at Aunt Bam stealing candy from a young trick-or-treater and gleefully showing off her medical marijuana card; the elderly Joe smoking a joint and referring to playing with himself; jokes about prostate exams; and the oldsters merrily cackling about the benefits of physically abusing children.

When Brian complains to his uncle Joe about being thrown off the roof when he was four years old, Joe accusingly asks him, "Did you die?"

'Too Close to Home'
READ MORE
Tyler Perry's 'Too Close to Home' Renewed for Season 2 at TLC
Attempting to reach younger audiences, Perry has cast several social media stars as the fraternity brothers, and a young female twerker who's had millions of views on YouTube. While they all look like they're having a fun time, whatever talents they may possess don't translate to the big screen.

Shot sitcom-style with multiple cameras and minimal takes, the film looks atrocious. It's disheartening that Perry, for all his obvious smarts and savvy, is unwilling to up his cinematic game. There's no arguing with the massive success he's had in film, television and theater, and he's clearly giving the people what they want. But the puerile humor that he continues to peddle makes awfully depressing viewing for those who don't find the concept of a large, middle-aged man in drag inherently funny.

In this article we write a complete list of 2016 upcoming hollywood movies news. In this article we write a list of horer movies missons movies civil war movies based on jungle movies batman movies superman movies Warcraft movies based on animal movies based on biography drama comedy adventure based on full action movie based on full romance movies based on adventure action and other type of movies details are provide in this article. A good collection of all fantastic movies 2016 are here

Top Upcoming Hollywood Movies News: In his directorial debut, Ewan McGregor takes the audience through the complex and emotional narrative of Phillip Roth's 1997 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. Set in Newark, N.J.,but filmed in around Pittsburgh, the film follows the Levov family as their picturesque life unravels when 16-year-old daughter Merry (Dakota Fanning) disappears after being accused of bombing a local post office. The father, Seymour Levov (Ewan McGregor), nicknamed "Swede," was a legendary high school athlete and former Marine. The mother, Dawn (Jennifer Connelly), was a former beauty queen. "With Swede cast as the ever-earnest, heartbroken dad and his wife Dawn much more easily slamming the door on the daughter she’s given up on as a hopeless cause," writes THR film critic Todd McCarthy, "the film’s ripest dramatic opportunities fall to Fanning, who rises to the occasion with her best big-screen work in a number of years." Read the full review here.

Ouija: Origin of Evil

Breaking the chain of unworthy sequels, director Mike Flanagan crafts a chilling tale that even includes a sly allusion to The Exorcist, writes THR film critic Frank Scheck. Set 50 years before the original Ouija, the film focuses on the Zander family, which consists of widowed mother Alice (Elizabeth Reaser) and her two daughters, teenager Paulina (Annalise Basso) and 9-year-old Doris (Lulu Wilson). Alice runs a fake medium business out of her home, in which she uses her kids to help create the illusions that mystify her clients. One day she brings a new prop home: the Ouija board. "The Ouija board soon proves itself a genuine conduit to the spirit world, with little Doris becoming possessed by an entity that clearly has malevolent intentions," writes Scheck. "Director-screenwriter Flanagan slowly ratchets up the tension, foregoing a heavy reliance on cheap jump scares (not that there aren't a few)." Read the full review here.

Boo! A Madea Halloween

Tyler Perry is back at it again with his fist-throwing, elderly character, Madea. This time she's taking on the ghouls and ghosts of Halloween. Tasked with babysitting her grandchildren on Halloween night, one of whom wants to attend a wild part at a local fraternity down the street, Madea must keep control of the house while also keeping her sanity. All the monsters are out to get her on a night filled with both tricks and treats. Scheck writes that the film is essentially critic-proof given that Perry has legions of faithful fans: "At this point, reviewing a Madea film is like a food critic reviewing the fare at McDonald's. By any objective standard, it's subpar, made of cheap ingredients and panders to the undiscriminating. But millions of people seem to love it, and happily come back for more.

In getting behind the camera for the very first time on his directorial debut American Pastoral, Ewan McGregor freely admits that he had advice from his industry connections and collaborators, including the likes of Ben Affleck and — of course — Danny Boyle.

But speaking at a special private screening of the film for friends and family in London, the Star Wars star revealed that he turned to his own father to help with a scene later on in the film where his character Seymour "Swede" Levov is shown aging several decades in just a few shots.

"It's quite difficult to pull that off these days with HD cameras — there's nowhere to hide latex seams and what have you," McGregor said during a Q&A with Boyle, with whom he worked on the Trainspotting sequel immediately after finishing American Pastoral, flying to Edinburgh the very next day. "But we've got an amazing special effects and makeup artist called Mike Marino, and he asked for any references."

McGregor went to his parents, who were both present at the screening, asking if his mother could take some photos of his dad, Jim McGregor.